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Authors: Brooks Jackson

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BOOK: unSpun
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Bush wasn't wrong: households earning between $40,000 and $50,000 in 2003 had received an average tax cut of $1,012, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. But richer families got a lot more. Households earning over $1 million saw cuts averaging $112,925. Kerry's definition of “middle class” included those earning as much as $200,000 a year: he promised not to raise taxes on anyone below that level. Dean and Gephardt, on the other hand, proposed to repeal all of Bush's tax cuts, including even those for people at the bottom of the federal income tax scale. So while all these politicians promised aid to the “middle class,” their policies and definitions were quite different.

Learn to recognize glittering generalities, and you'll notice them flying at you from every direction. Lots of groups push for “affordable housing” but seldom define what that means in terms of price. A “right to privacy” sounds good, but should it prevent the FBI from asking who took out books on making explosives? Years ago, Vice President Dan Quayle frequently expressed support for “family values,” but his support didn't extend to unwed mothers and their children. We learned that in 1992, when Quayle famously attacked the popular television sitcom character Murphy Brown, who had become a mother out of wedlock, for “mocking the importance of fathers by bearing a child alone and calling it just another lifestyle choice.” Some other nice-sounding but vague terms to watch out for: dignity, honor, freedom, integrity, and justice (including both the “economic” and “social” varieties). It's always good to ask, “What do you mean by that, exactly?”

Chapter 3

“Tall” Coffees and Assault Weapons

Tricks of the Deception Trade

A
NYONE WHO HAS EVER STOPPED BY OUR MOST POPULAR COFFEE
chain knows that a “tall” coffee does not appear to be tall in relation to anything else on the menu. Things are often not as they are described. “Large” olives are actually medium-sized. The Montana-based Evergreen Foundation is supported by companies that cut down trees, and the Washington-based Center for Consumer Freedom isn't run by consumers but was set up by a lobbyist for the booze and tobacco businesses. And when a politician talks about a “cut,” he or she almost never means that spending will actually go down.

Such deceptive tricks are so commonplace and obvious we can shrug them off, ordering a “small coffee” or buying bottled olives whose real size can be seen. But others deceive us when we let our guard down. To remain unSpun, we need to recognize the common tricks of the deception trade.

TRICK #1:
Misnomers

T
HE SO-CALLED “ASSAULT WEAPON BAN” SIGNED BY
P
RESIDENT
Clinton in 1994 didn't really ban assault weapons—at least, not the ones you see pictured so often in the hands of soldiers and terrorists. Fully automatic weapons of all kinds were outlawed around the time of George “Machine Gun” Kelly and Bonnie and Clyde. It has been illegal in the United States to own a real machine gun since 1934 (except with an expensive and hard-to-obtain federal permit). In fact, all that the assault weapon law “banned” was the manufacture and import of certain
semiautomatic
weapons, which can't be fired any faster than an ordinary pistol or rifle despite their military-style looks. The very term “assault weapon ban” gave a misleading impression.

When Congress let the law expire in the midst of the 2004 presidential campaign, the misleading name was exploited for political benefit in a TV ad by the liberal political action committee MoveOn PAC. “This is an assault weapon. It can fire up to three hundred rounds a minute,” the narrator said, while a fully automatic AK-47 appeared on screen. “In the hands of terrorists it could kill hundreds.” Those words were punctuated by the sound of a rapid burst of machine-gun fire. “John Kerry, a sportsman and a hunter, would keep them illegal.”

Technically, those words were true: Kerry wasn't proposing to repeal the 1934 law banning machine guns. But neither was Bush. Nevertheless, MoveOn PAC's ad continued: “George Bush will let the assault weapon ban expire. George Bush says he's making America safer. Who does he think he's kidding?” The totality of MoveOn's ad conveyed the utterly false message that Bush was about to approve the sale of real, fully automatic assault weapons that could “kill hundreds” in the hands of terrorists.

Much of the public was taken in by the ad. Language does our thinking for us, and people had been fooled in the first place by the statute's misleading name. After the election, the National Annenberg Election Survey asked respondents to evaluate the truthfulness of this statement: “The assault weapons ban outlawed automatic and semiautomatic weapons.” The result: 57 percent found the statement to be either “very truthful” or “somewhat truthful,” while only 28 percent said it was either “not too truthful” or “not truthful at all.” By a margin of two to one, those who expressed an opinion had the wrong idea.

Even a simple term like “large” becomes misleading in the hands of the California Olive Industry. “California Ripe Olives grow in a variety of sizes: small, medium, large, extra large, jumbo, colossal and super colossal,” the industry website informs us. Of the seven sizes, “large” is actually the third smallest. This sort of silliness seems to be escalating. The Starbucks Corporation doesn't even use the term “large.” The smallest size on the menu is a “Tall” coffee (twelve ounces); the next size up is a “Grande” (sixteen ounces) and the largest size Starbucks calls “Venti” (twenty ounces).

Such puffery is so common that much of the time we aren't fooled, and can even make fun of it. When Seattle's Best coffee shops came up with a new name for their largest coffee, the humorist Dave Barry advised: “Listen, people: You should never, ever have to utter the words ‘Grande Supremo' unless you are addressing a tribal warlord who is holding you captive and threatening to burn you at the stake. JUST SAY YOU WANT A LARGE COFFEE, PEOPLE.” We think that's good advice.

Some names really can deceive, however, unless we keep our guard up. The makers of Smoke Away, a dietary supplement that purportedly helps people stop smoking in a week or less, paid $1.3 million in 2005 to settle a complaint by the Federal Trade Commission, which said there was no reasonable basis for the product's claim. Also in 2005 the FTC announced more than $1 million in settlements against marketers of dietary or herbal supplements misleadingly named Lung Support Formula (which supposedly cured asthma and emphysema), Antibetic Pancreas Tonic (claimed to cure diabetes), and Testerex (supposedly effective in treating 62 percent to 95 percent of cases of erectile dysfunction). The FTC called the claims “false and outrageous.” In all those cases, the product names were mentioned as one factor contributing to the deception.

Don't assume that just because a law is called an assault weapon ban or a product is called Smoke Away that they really do what their names imply. Always ask, “What's behind that name? Does it really describe the thing they are trying to sell me? What would be a more accurate name for it?”

TRICK #2:
Frame It and Claim It

F
EW BUT THE RICH NEEDED TO THINK MUCH ABOUT THE FEDERAL
estate tax, because it never touched the vast majority of Americans. In 1992, for example, the tax fell only on the richest 1.3 percent of those who died. But that's when a group backed by some billionaire families, including the Gallo wine clan and the Blethen family, owners of
The Seattle Times,
began lobbying to repeal it. They seemed to have so little chance that few paid any attention. But then somebody decided that rather than call the estate tax by its proper and legal name, activists should instead refer to it as the death tax. The man who claims credit for this is James L. Martin, head of the conservative 60 Plus Association. He tells of establishing a “beer and pizza fund” to which he required his employees to contribute $1 every time they slipped and uttered the term “estate tax.” Other antitax crusaders picked up the name, and Republicans made it part of their political vocabulary around the time they took control of the House of Representatives in January 1995.

The term “death tax” was an intentional misnomer: obviously, what's being taxed isn't death, but bequeathed wealth. Nevertheless, the tactic worked. In 2001 the Republican-controlled Congress approved a gradual phase-down and temporary repeal, which will become permanent if foes of the tax get their way.

Why did this tactic work? The Republican strategist Frank Luntz explains. “The public wouldn't support it [repeal] because the word ‘estate' sounds wealthy,” he told an interviewer for the PBS documentary series
Frontline
in 2004. But call it a death tax, he added, “and suddenly something that isn't viable achieves the support of 75 percent of the American people. It's the same tax, but nobody really knows what an estate is. But they certainly know what it means to be taxed when you die.”

Although the term “death tax” was misleading, it framed the issue in a way that made people think of the tax unfavorably even before they considered any facts. A simple rule of persuasion holds, “Frame the issue,
claim
the issue.” Some supporters of the estate tax later regretted they had been so slow to frame the issue their way, as the “Paris Hilton tax cut.” Indeed, in 2006 the Coalition for America's Priorities ran TV and radio ads calling estate tax repeal a giveaway to “billionaires and heiresses.” The radio ad featured a Hilton imitator praising the Senate as “awesome” for considering repeal: “So what that gas is over three dollars a gallon? Like…use a credit card!” As we write this, Congress is still debating whether to repeal the tax permanently or just narrow it radically to a very few, very rich families. Either way, the “death tax” misnomer was a powerful weapon that the other side was slow to counter.

Democrats had better luck framing an issue when they attacked President Bush's Social Security plan. Bush proposed to create an option for younger workers to divert up to 4 percent of their wages through the payroll tax to personal accounts, which would be invested in government-approved mutual funds. Critics, among them the AFL-CIO, called this “Bush's plan to privatize Social Security,” as though the entire Social Security program would somehow move from governmental control to private ownership, which wasn't at all what Bush was proposing. At a time when massive corporate fraud was being exposed at Enron and other major corporations, and the stock market had taken a huge dive, “privatizing” even part of one's retirement nest egg was a frightening idea; it implied taking the retirement program out of the hands of the government and turning it over to Wall Street speculators. In 2002, CNN correspondent John King asked the president about “your plan to partially privatize Social Security,” and Bush protested: “We call them personal savings accounts, John.”

Bush, of course, was trying to frame the issue his way; calling the accounts “personal savings” made it sound as though the owners would control their retirement money themselves, as they would a checking account. In fact, the accounts Bush eventually proposed allowed only a handful of investment choices, with little or no choice in how money could be paid out at retirement. Both sides used misleading words in the debate, but Bush's nomenclature didn't catch on. When he made a strong push for passage in 2005, opponents kept calling the plan “privatization,” and the idea was quietly dropped for lack of support. The issue had not been framed as Bush wished, as one of potential gain for younger workers. It had been framed as one of potential loss for Social Security beneficiaries generally.

George Lakoff, a professor of linguistics at the University of California–Berkeley, has argued in a best-selling book,
Don't Think of an Elephant,
that conservatives have been far better than liberals at framing issues in this way. He says that President Bush successfully framed the tax debate by talking about “tax relief,” as though taxes were an affliction, rather than “your membership dues in America,” as Lakoff would prefer. He also cites Bush's use of terms such as “compassionate conservatism” and “No Child Left Behind” to make Republican policies more palatable to swing voters. “This is the use of Orwellian language—language that means the opposite of what it says—to appease people in the middle,” he argues.

Lakoff's solution, however, is more such language—from the left. His Rockridge Institute is working on a “Handbook for Progressives” to assist his side. Even that title is instructive: note that the term “progressive” sets us up to think of people in favor of “progress,” advancing toward a bright future. Had he called it a “Handbook for Liberals” he would have used a more neutral term—but one that has lost popularity.

For the ordinary citizen or voter, the important thing is to recognize that both sides try to use words that we'll automatically accept or reject without thinking too much. Indeed, sometimes just choosing a word means choosing sides. When discussing abortion, which word do you choose, “fetus” or “baby”? Are you “pro-choice” or “pro-life”? But there's generally much more to any issue than a name or a slogan can tell us. Judging an issue or a product by its name is as foolish as judging a book by its cover. Better to say to yourself, “Okay, that's what they want me to think. Now what's the rest of the story?”

TRICK #3:
Weasel Words

A
NYONE WHO HAS GONE TO A SALE AT A RETAIL STORE IS FAMILIAR
with the principle of “weasel words.” Weasel words suck the meaning out of a phrase or sentence, the way that weasels supposedly suck the contents out of an egg, leaving only a hollow shell. In “Up to 50 percent off,” the empty shell of a phrase is “50 percent off,” the weasel words are “up to.” “Fifty percent off” means half price, period. Having added the words “Up to,” the store can offer a single item at half price and mark down everything else by far smaller amounts, or not at all, and still, technically, be telling the truth.

Publishers Clearing House became the biggest magazine seller in America using lines such as “You May Already Be a Winner!” on the outside of their mailed sales pitches. “May” was the weasel word: the vast majority of recipients, of course, won nothing. In 2000, California and several other states sued PCH, accusing it of sending deceptive mailings labeled, for example, “[Consumer's Name]: WINNERS CONFIRMATION FORM ENCLOSED” or “PCH FINAL NOTIFICATION FOR TAX-FREE $11,700,000.00 SUPERPRIZE.” That went beyond weasel wording to imply that the recipients
were
winners, according to the lawsuit. PCH denied any deception but agreed to refund $16 million to certain “high-activity” customers, and to make clear in future mailings that the consumer hadn't yet been determined to be a winner. Qualifying language was to be equal in prominence to “winner” language.

More weasel words: Hawaiian Punch “Fruit Juicy Red” is only 5 percent fruit juice, according to the manufacturer. The other 95 percent is nearly all sugar water and coloring. “Juicy” is the weasel word, meaning something less than “juice.” Estée Lauder says its “Skin Perfecting Creme Firming Nourisher” makes “tiny lines seem to disappear.” “Seem” is the weasel word in that pitch; the wrinkles, of course, don't really disappear. Egg Beaters advertise “the taste of real eggs,” but the product is really only egg whites colored by beta carotene, plus other non-egg ingredients. To get a “taste of” something means you aren't getting it all.

BOOK: unSpun
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